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Taking the reader through a long view of American history, What
Happened to the Vital Center? offers a novel and important
contribution to the ongoing scholarly and popular discussion of how
America fell apart and what might be done to end the Cold Civil War
that fractures the country and weakens the national resolve. In
What Happened to the Vital Center?, Nicholas Jacobs and Sidney
Milkis tackle a foundational question within American political
history: Is current partisan polarization, aggravated by populist
disdain for constitutional principles and institutions, a novel
development in American politics? Populism is not a new threat to
the country's democratic experiment, but now insurgents intrude
directly on elections and government. During previous periods of
populist unrest, the US was governed by resilient parties that
moderated extremist currents within the political system. This
began to crumble during the 1960s, as anti-institutionalist
incursions into the Democratic and Republican organizations gave
rise to reforms that empowered activists at the expense of the
median voter and shifted the controlling power over parties to the
executive branch. Gradually, the moderating influence that parties
played in structuring campaigns and the policy process eroded to
the point where extreme polarization dominated and decision-making
power migrated to the presidency. Weakened parties were
increasingly dominated by presidents and their partnerships with
social activists, leading to a gridlocked system characterized by
the politics of demonization and demagoguery. Executive-centered
parties more easily ignore the sorts of moderating voices that had
prevailed in an earlier era. While the Republican Party is more
susceptible to the dangers of populism than the Democrats, both
parties are animated by a presidency-led, movement-centered vision
of democracy. After tracing this history, the authors dismiss calls
to return to some bygone era. Rather, the final section highlights
the ways in which the two parties can be revitalized as
institutions of collective responsibility that can transform
personal ambition and rancorous partisanship into principled
conflict over the profound issues that now divide the country. The
book will transform our understanding of how we ended up in our
current state of extreme polarization and what we can do to fix it.
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The Marquise of O- (Paperback)
Heinrich Von Kleist; Translated by Nicholas Jacobs
1
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R346
R280
Discovery Miles 2 800
Save R66 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In a Northern Italian town during the Napoleonic Wars, Julietta, a
young widow and mother of impeccable reputation, finds herself
unexpectedly pregnant. This follows an attack on the town's citadel, in
which several Russian soldiers tried to assault her before she was
rescued by Count F-, at which point she fell unconscious. Thrown out of
her father's house, Julietta publishes an announcement in the local
newspaper stating that she is pregnant and would like the father of her
child to make himself known so that she can marry him.
What follows is an ambiguously comic drama of sexuality and family
respectability. One of Kleist's best-loved works, The Marquise of O- is
an ingenious and timeless story of the mystery of human desire, and
Nicholas Jacobs's new translation captures the full richness of its
irony.
Taking the reader through a long view of American history, What
Happened to the Vital Center? offers a novel and important
contribution to the ongoing scholarly and popular discussion of how
America fell apart and what might be done to end the Cold Civil War
that fractures the country and weakens the national resolve. In
What Happened to the Vital Center?, Nicholas Jacobs and Sidney
Milkis tackle a foundational question within American political
history: Is current partisan polarization, aggravated by populist
disdain for constitutional principles and institutions, a novel
development in American politics? Populism is not a new threat to
the country's democratic experiment, but now insurgents intrude
directly on elections and government. During previous periods of
populist unrest, the US was governed by resilient parties that
moderated extremist currents within the political system. This
began to crumble during the 1960s, as anti-institutionalist
incursions into the Democratic and Republican organizations gave
rise to reforms that empowered activists at the expense of the
median voter and shifted the controlling power over parties to the
executive branch. Gradually, the moderating influence that parties
played in structuring campaigns and the policy process eroded to
the point where extreme polarization dominated and decision-making
power migrated to the presidency. Weakened parties were
increasingly dominated by presidents and their partnerships with
social activists, leading to a gridlocked system characterized by
the politics of demonization and demagoguery. Executive-centered
parties more easily ignore the sorts of moderating voices that had
prevailed in an earlier era. While the Republican Party is more
susceptible to the dangers of populism than the Democrats, both
parties are animated by a presidency-led, movement-centered vision
of democracy. After tracing this history, the authors dismiss calls
to return to some bygone era. Rather, the final section highlights
the ways in which the two parties can be revitalized as
institutions of collective responsibility that can transform
personal ambition and rancorous partisanship into principled
conflict over the profound issues that now divide the country. The
book will transform our understanding of how we ended up in our
current state of extreme polarization and what we can do to fix it.
Out of the chaos following Lenin's death and the mounting fury
against Lukacs and his freshly penned History and Class
Consciousness (1923), this book bears an assessment of Lenin as
"the only theoretical equal to Marx." Lukacs shows, with
unprecedented clarity, how Lenin's historical interventions-from
his vanguard politics and repurposing of the state to his detection
of a new, imperialist stage of capitalism-advanced the conjunction
of theory and practice, class consciousness and class struggle. A
postscript from 1967 reflects on how this picture of Lenin, which
both shattered failed Marxism and preserved certain prejudices of
its day, became even more inspirational after the oppressions of
Stalin. Lukacs's study remains indispensable to an understanding of
the contemporary significance of Lenin's life and work.
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Nadine Gordimer
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